On Bitcoin UASF: Private Internet Access stands with the People

Private Internet Access was one of the first VPN providers to accept Bitcoin as payment for our VPN service back in early 2011 on the #Bitcoin-OTC channel on IRC. Since then, Bitcoin has grown into a truly mature, decentralized network with widespread usage across the globe. This is both good and bad; while Bitcoin’s utility and price have risen, so have its fees. Luckily, the Bitcoin Core developers have invented a solution to this problem that has widespread community support: Segregated Witness (SegWit).

Segwit increases capacity and lays the foundation for the Lightning Network which enables truly free (or close to it) and instant transactions. Segwit is backwards compatible, has been tested rigorously, and is already live on Litecoin (a fork of Bitcoin, also known as an altcoin). Sadly, Bitcoin miners have been blocking Segwit for many, many months for political reasons.

We’ve been fighting the good fight since the beginning. To us, Bitcoin was an obvious movement to throw our support behind. As longtime Bitcoin supporters and users, PIA truly believes that the users are the ones that have the real power in a decentralized system.

BIP148-UASF is a movement of Bitcoin users who are forcing the issue and taking back power from miners to get Segwit activated. PIA is joining this movement and will be enforcing Segwit consensus rules on August 1st. Since the beginning, we have been using Bitpay to accept Bitcoin payments, so we will be requesting that they support the UASF to process our payments. If we can’t get them to do so in time, we will be switching to a payment provider that does support the UASF or accepting Bitcoin directly through a Bitcoin Core BIP148 full node.

We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive.
We do not forget.Expect us.

You just lost customer PIA. Can’t believe your company is so stupid that goes against Satoshi’s consensus (longest chain is the true Bitcoin) and supports this idiotic UASF ran by morons who don’t even actually use Bitcoin. I vote with my money and I will no longer use Private Internet Access as my VPN service provider. Was nice being your customer for 4 years though.

Why does the Anonymous motto appear on this page? Your position on the scaling debate is your own business, but I’m a little bit uneasy seeing that my VPN provider seems to be affiliated with one of the most infamous hacking organizations in existence. 🙁

Hardly the point of my comment. Call it a group or a collective, or whatever you like, but they have a saying, and that saying appears in the article. If you were trying to be pedantic, though, good job!